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Dmitry Pavlov (general)

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Allegiance
  
Soviet Union

Role
  
General

Name
  
Dmitry Pavlov


Rank
  
General of the Army

Years of service
  
1916 – 1941

Awards
  
Hero of the Soviet Union

Dmitry Pavlov (general) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsee

Native name
  
Dmítrii Grigór'evich Pávlov

Born
  
October 23, 1897 Village of Vonyukh (now Pavlovo), Kologrivsky District, Kostroma Governorate, Russian Empire (
1897-10-23
)

Battles/wars
  
World War I Russian Civil War Spanish Civil War Soviet–Japanese Border Wars Winter War World War II

Died
  
July 22, 1941, Moscow, Russia

Battles and wars
  
Russian Civil War, Spanish Civil War, Soviet–Japanese border conflicts, Winter War, World War II

Commands held
  
Belorussian Military District, Western Front

Similar People
  
Semyon Timoshenko, Kirill Meretskov, Fyodor Kuznetsov, Mikhail Kirponos, Fedor von Bock

Dmitry Grigoryevich Pavlov (Russian: Дми́трий Григо́рьевич Па́влов; October 23, 1897 – July 22, 1941) was a Soviet general who commanded the key Soviet Western Front during the initial stage of the German invasion of the Soviet Union (Operation Barbarossa) in June 1941. After his forces were heavily defeated within the first few days of the campaign, he was relieved of his command, arrested, charged with military incompetence and executed. He was exonerated or, in Soviet parlance, rehabilitated in 1956.

Contents

Military career

Pavlov was a veteran of the First World War, as well as the Russian Civil War, serving in the Red Army since 1919. He graduated from the Frunze Military Academy in 1928. He then commanded various mechanised and cavalry units. As one of the Soviet military advisers, in 1936–37 he took part in the Spanish Civil War on the Republican side (using the nom de guerre Pablo) and commanded a brigade of Soviet tanks, for which he was made a Hero of the Soviet Union. In contrast to many other officers who took part in that war, he was not purged after his return to the Soviet Union, and was made the Head of the Directorate of Tank and Armoured Car Troops of the Red Army which gave him considerable influence on its development. In particular he insisted that tanks be shifted to infantry support roles, which in hindsight turned out to be incorrect. He participated in the Winter War, as well as the border clashes with Japan.

In 1940, Pavlov became the commander of the Western (Belorussian) Special Military District, which became the Soviet Western Front bearing the brunt of German attack during Operation Barbarossa in June 1941. On 22 February 1941, he was one of the first Soviet generals to receive the new rank of General of the Army, inferior only to the rank of Marshal of the Soviet Union.

Downfall

After the units under his command suffered a disastrous defeat in the Battle of Białystok-Minsk, during the first days of the invasion, Pavlov was relieved of his command on 1 July 1941, arrested and accused of criminal incompetence and treason.

He and his chief of staff Klimovskikh were first accused of:

Pavlov and his deputies were accused of "failure to perform their duties" rather than treason. On July 22, 1941 the same day the sentence was handed down, Pavlov's property was confiscated, and he was deprived of military rank, shot and buried in a landfill near Moscow by the NKVD.

Death penalties were also passed down for other commanders of the Western Front, including the Chief of Staff, Major General B. E. Klimovskikh; the chief of the communications corps, Major General AT Grigoriev; the Chief of Artillery, Lieutenant General of Artillery A. Klich; and Air Force Deputy Chief of the Western Front (who, after the suicide of Major General Aviation I. I. Kopets, was, nominally at least, Chief of the Air Force of the Western Front), Major General Aviation A. I. Tayursky. Also, the commander of the 14th Mechanized Corps, Major General Stepan Oborin, was arrested on July 8 and shot. The commander of the 4th Army, Major General A. A. Korobkov, was dismissed on July 8, arrested the next day and shot on July 22. On the other hand, Pavlov's deputy commander, Lt. Gen. Ivan Boldin, at the head of a small group, became a popular hero in those dark days after spending 45 days fighting for survival behind enemy lines, and finally, on August 10, leading a total of 1,650 officers and men through to Soviet lines near Smolensk. STAVKA Order No. 270 praised the feat of Boldin's "division".

Pavlov and other commanders of Western Front were exonerated as lacking evidence in 1956.

References

Dmitry Pavlov (general) Wikipedia